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Indoor Surface Chemistry: Developing a Molecular Picture of Reactions on Indoor Interfaces

Journal

CHEM
Volume 6, Issue 12, Pages 3203-3218

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.chempr.2020.08.023

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Sloan Foundation's Chemistry of Indoor Environments (CIE) program [G-2018-10122]
  2. Sloan Surface Consortium for Chemistry of Indoor Environments (SURF-CIE) (Sloan grant) [G-2019-12365]
  3. MOdelling Consortium for Chemistry of Indoor Environments (MOCCIE) (Sloan grant) [G-2019-12306]

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Chemical reactions on indoor surfaces play an important role in air quality in indoor environments, where humans spend 90% of their time. We focus on the challenges of understanding the complex chemistry that takes place on indoor surfaces and identify crucial steps necessary to gain a molecular-level understanding of environmental indoor surface chemistry: (1) elucidate key surface reaction mechanisms and kinetics important to indoor air chemistry, (2) define a range of relevant and representative surfaces to probe, and (3) define the drivers of surface reactivity, particularly with respect to the surface composition, light, and temperature. Within the drivers of surface composition are the roles of adsorbed/absorbed water associated with indoor surfaces and the prevalence, inhomogeneity, and properties of secondary organic films that can impact surface reactivity. By combining laboratory studies, field measurements, and modeling we can gain insights into the molecular processes necessary to further our understanding of the indoor environment.

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